- cross-posted to:
- comicstrips@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- comicstrips@lemmy.world
Under the ‘has cleared its orbital neighborhood’ and ‘fuses hydrogen into helium’ definitions, thanks to human activities Earth technically no longer qualifies as a planet but DOES count as a star.
Would it be a non-planet for the millions of years it would take to clear its orbit?
Does Earth’s body/features magically change somehow for the duration of the clearing process, so that it doesn’t resemble a planet?
The point is that using external criteria to identify what an internal thing is is not logical, or scientific.
You don’t know that, especially with the size of the Oort Cloud, and the size of the orbit to clear. And the rules for how much clearance has to be done is very arbitrary.
Also bodies can be small and have a decaying heat source that’ll last many millions of years, or renewing heat source via tidal interactions. It’s not necessarily a size thing.
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Many million years is nothing in geological or astronomical timescales. Any body with a heat source that short is dead cold by know. The solar system is 4.6 billion years old and the formation of planets or larger bodys has ended about 4 billion years ago.
And tidal forces mean that a way larger body is close by, like a gas giant, as far as I remember are all known body’s with tidal heating moons not planets.